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Charges for Flint Officials, but What the City Really Needs Is Financial Help
The $400 Million Flint Water Scandal Is Just the Beginning · The Fiscal Times

The wheels of justice are finally beginning to turn in Flint, Michigan, following last year’s startling revelation that the city’s drinking water had been poisoned with lead for over a year before residents learned of the crisis.

Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette announced that criminal and misdemeanor charges had been brought against two former state environmental health officials and the man who ran the city water treatment plant for neglect of duty and intentionally covering up details of the disaster while more than 8,000 children were exposed to dangerously high levels of lead.

Related: Outraged Americans Want Immediate Action on Flint Water Crisis

Mike Glasgow, the former city official, was charged with “tampering with evidence and willful neglect of duty” for allegedly filing false reports to the state about water quality, according to the Detroit Free Press. State environmental health officials Stephen Busch and Michael Prysby were charged with “misconduct, evidence tampering, conspiracy and violations of the Safe Water Drinking Act” for allegedly changing water test results.

If convicted, the three could face up to five years in prison, the attorney general said at a news conference. And Schuette promised there would be more prosecutions in the case that has enraged many Americans and severely tarnished the reputation of Republican Gov. Rick Snyder

Flint residents and city officials, no doubt, were pleased with what appears to be the first serious step towards determining accountability for a beleaguered city that has gone without potable drinking water for over a year. The predominantly black and impoverished factory town has been beset with a host of public health problems, including an uptick in Legionnaire’s Disease and the horrifying threat of developmental problems for infants and toddlers who were exposed to the lead-laden drinking water.

Related: How the Flint Drinking Water Crisis Became a Political Punching Bag

Flint became a cause célèbre for the two Democratic presidential candidates, Hillary Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who staged a presidential debate there in early March. The governor and federal Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy were recently hauled before a House investigative committee and pummeled by Republicans and Democrats alike for botching the crisis.

Making matters worse, a national study by a public interest group found that Flint residents paid the highest water rates in America at the same time the water was being poisoned with lead from leaching pipes.